248 Mo. 83 | Mo. | 1913
The plaintiff instituted this suit in the circuit court of Butler county against S. M. Chapman, Isaac Luke, the National Iron Mining Company, a corporation, J. P. Thomas, Adams T. Burns, Adam F. Burns and Addison F. Burns, alias Adam T. Burns, alias Adam F. Bums, under section 650, Revised Statutes 1899, now section 2535, Revised Stat
■Service was had upon all the defendants, and all except S. M. Chapman, Isaac Luke, J. P. Thomas and the National Iron Mining Company made default, and in due time judgment by default was rendered against them. The National Iron Mining Company and Isaac Luke filed their separate answer admitting that the former was a corporation and that they claimed to own the land in controversy, “in fee simple absolute.” They also filed a cross-bill founded upon the same statutes and prayed the court to ascertain and determine the rights, title and interest of the parties .to the same lands, describing them again.
The reply was a general denial.
The trial began January 24, 1908, and before the plaintiff closed his case, by leave of court, he dismissed the cause as to Isaac Luke and the National Iron Mining Company. The trial proceeded on the answer and cross-bill of Isaac Luke and the National Iron Mining Company, the answer of S. M. Chapman, and the replication of the plaintiff.
After seeing and hearing all the evidence introduced the court took the case under advisement until May 11, 1908, when the court found the issues for the plaintiff and against the defendants Isaac Luke, the National Iron Mining Company and S. M. Chapman, and rendered judgment accordingly in favor of the plaintiff and against all of the defendants.
After moving unsuccessfully for a new trial, the answering defendants and J. P. Thomas appealed the cause to this court.
The evidence introduced by the plaintiff was substantially as follows:
2d. A certified copy of the original entry from the General Land Office of the United States, showing that Samuel Petersberger, on the 7th day of September, 1857, entered all the land in controversy, viz: The north-half of the northwest quarter of section eleven; and the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section twelve, in township twenty-six north, range five east, in Butler county, Missouri.
3d. Patent from the United States of America to Samuel Petersberger, dated February, 10,1896, and filed August 18, 1903, and recorded in Booh 68, page 324, of the deed records of Butler county, Missouri, conveying all the land in suit.
4th. Warranty deed from Samuel Petersberger to John Milroy, dated November 10, 1862, recorded January 7, 1873, in Booh I, page 558, of the deed records of Butler county, Missouri, conveying the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section twelve, in suit.
5th. Warranty deed from' Samuel Petersberger and wife to Adams T. Burns, dated January 1, 1873, recorded August 30, 1873, in Booh J, page 21, of the deed records of Butler county, Missouri, conveying’ the north half of the northwest quarter of section eleven, in suit.
6th. Warranty deed from John Milroy and wife to Samuel P’etersberger, dated October 29, 1872, recorded May 18, 1874, in Booh J, page 257, of the deed records of Butler county, Missouri, conveying the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section twelve, in suit.
7th. Warranty deed from Samuel Petersberger and wife to John J. Winton, dated February 6, 1873, recorded March 10, 1873, in Booh I, page 425, of the deed records of Butler county, Missouri, conveying the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section twelve.
9th. Warranty deed from Abner E. Leonard to Adam F. Bums dated May 9, 1873, recorded May 20, 1873, in Book I, page 524, of the deed records of Butler county, Missouri., conveying the land in suit.
10th. Quitclaim deed from Addison F. Burns and wife to E. W. Graves, dated August 4, 1903, recorded August 11, 1903, in Book 63, page 220, of the deed records of Butler county, Missouri, conveying all the land in suit.
11th. Over the objection and exceptions of counsel for defendants, the plaintiff then read in evidence the deposition, direct examination, of Addison F. Burns, defendant, showing that Adams T. Burns and Adam F. Burns, mentioned in the foregoing deeds, are one and the same person, otherwise known as Addison F. Burns.
Counsel for plaintiff in his statement of the casein this court, quotes the following from the evidence introduced by the defendants, viz: .
“Oral evidence introduced by said defendants Luke and National Iron Mining Company, developed the fact that Isaac Luke went on the lands in suit as a squatter; and that the other defendants, Chapman, Thomas and National Iron Mining Company, hold under the said Luke; and said testimony also developed the further fact that none of the defendants have any •tifie by adverse possession, or by virtue of any statute of limitations.”.
(In order to properly understand this evidence it is necessary to state that the original bill of exceptions in this case was lost or destroyed, and that the one now on file is a substituted bill, which does not purport to
The plaintiff then rested.
Thereupon counsel for the defendants Isaac Luke and the National Iron Mining Company introduced the following evidence, in support of their cross-bill, viz.:
(a) Quitclaim deed from Samuel Petersberger of the county of...............State of Missouri, party of the first part, to the defendant, Isaac Luke, dated November 2, 1900, recorded March 20, 1903, in Book 68, page 87, of the deed records oí Butler county, Missouri ; conveying all of the land in suit.
This deed was duly acknowleged before I. N. Pearce, a notary public of Butler county, Missouri, who certifies that the grantor therein was personally known to him to be the person described in and who executed the foregoing instrument.
(b) Defendants further offered a general warranty deed from Isaac Luke and wife to the appellant, National Iron Mining Company, dated October 26, 1906, acknowledged on the 7th day of November, 1906, conveying all of the iron ore and all other minerals and mineral substances under the surface of all the land in controversy.
Said defendants, Luke and the National Iron Mining Company, also introduced in evidence a certified copy of the record of the conviction of Addison F. Burns for forgery. The record showed that Addison F. Burns had been convicted in Clarion county, Pennsylvania, and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of seven years and six months, for forgery of a deed to certain land in Dent county, Mis- ■ souri, and also for uttering and passing the same forged deed.
Defendants also offered in evidence the second deposition of Addison F. Burns, taken in the former suit of E. W. Graves, plaintiff, against Isaac Luke,
Witness stated on cross-examination, that as far as he knew the deed from Samuel Petersberger and wife to Adam F. Burns, was expressly made for him; as far as he understood it, the land was conveyed to him; his best understanding was that the deed from Abner E. Leonard was intended for him; that the record would show until what time he had paid taxes; witness further stated that he always signed his name Addison F. Burns; that his pension comes under the name of Addison Burns, but since he was a boy he always signed his name Addison F. Burns in business transactions.
On re-direct examination, witness stated that he never knew that those mistakes were in the deeds, until
“Q. For aught you know personally then the persons named as grantees in your deed, Samuel Petersberger and Sarah E. Petersberger, his wife, also Abner E. Leonard, may have been mere straw persons without any potential existence — mere myths and fables ?
“A. Those names were intended to represent somebody, I am certain of that, might he a mistake.”
This was all of the testimony offered by the defendants, Isaac Luke and the appellant, National Iron Mining Company, on their cross-hill.
Thereupon, in opposition to said cross-hill, plaintiff again read in evidence all the evidence introduced in this case in chief. That was. all of the evidence that was ever introduced by plaintiff against this appellant.
And this was all the evidence.
The first proposition presented to us for determination is one of practice.
After these defendants had introduced all their evidence and rested the case, counsel for plaintiff reintroduced in evidence, under the reply or general denial of the cross-bill, all the evidence it had theretofore introduced under the petition in chief, against the defaulting defendants, which was the same evidence that is set forth in the foregoing statement of the case.
After all the evidence was introduced on both sides, the court took the case under advisement, and thereafter on May 11, 1908', the court found the issues for the plaintiff, and rendered judgment accordingly for him, and against all of the defendants.
Upon this state of the record, counsel for appellant assigns as error the action of the court in proceeding with the trial on the cross-bill after the petition as to the defendants who filed it had been dismissed. The contention is, that the dismissal of the petition as to those defendants carried with it the cross-bill, and cite in support thereof, the case of Gray v. Ward, 234 Mo. 291. That case seems to sustain that contention, but the attention of the learned judge who wrote the opinion, was not called to the amendment of section 650, Revised Statutes 1899. That section was amended by the Legislature in 1909 (Laws 1909, p. 343, sec. 1.). As
After that amendment, it is perfectly clear that a dismissal of the petition would not dismiss the cross-bill. [State ex rel. Bernero v. McQuillin et al., 246 Mo. 517.] But in the case at bar, the plaintiff is not assisted by that amendment, for the reason that this suit was instituted long prior to the date of the amendment, and consequently is still governed by old section 650.
We, therefore, rule- this, question of procedure against the defendants.
II. Counsel for the appellant, National Iron Mining Company, assign many other errors, among which is that the trial “court erred in finding and adjudging plaintiff to be the owner of the land in controversy. No competent testimony of any kind whatever was offered by plaintiff to show that the grantor named in the deed dated August 4, 1903, Addison F. Burns, under which plaintiff claims, was the same person as either Adam F. Burns, the grantee named in the deed dated May 9, 1873, or Adam F. Burns, the grantee named in the deed dated January 1, 1873.”
In support of that statement, we quote the following from said defendant’s evidence, as it appears on page fifty-one of their abstract of the record, viz.: “Oral evidence introduced by said defendants Luke and National Iron Mining Company developed the fact that Isaac Luke went on the land in suit as a squatter; and that the other defendants, Chapman, Thomas and National Iron Mining Company, hold under the said Luke; and said testimony also developed the further fact that none of the defendants have any title by adverse possession, or by virtue of any statute of limitations.”
By reading this evidence it will be seen that the appellant, the National Iron Mining Company, has no
The only deeds appellant introduces in evidence are the two previously mentioned, one from Samuel Petersberger to Isaac Luke, dated November 2, 1900, and the other from Isaac Luke and wife to the National Iron Mining Company, dated October 26', 1906'.
Conceding these two deeds to be genuine, of which there is grave doubt, it will nevertheless be seen that Samuel Petersberger and wife, by the deed previously mentioned, dated February 6, 1873, conveyed all their right, title and interest in and to said land to John J. Winton (through whom respondent claims) long prior to the date of the deed from said Petersberger to said Luke.
That being true, it is perfectly apparent that the National Iron Mining Company has no paper title to this land, and as previously shown, it has none by adverse possession.
Upon the concession previously made as to the plaintiff’s title and right to the judgment, there would be great force in this insistence of appellant, had the record disclosed the fact that it was in the possession of the land at the date of the institution of the suit, but after a careful examination of the record we have failed to find any evidence which shows appellant was ever in possession of any of the land in controversy. In fact, it only claims the minerals thereon, if any, of the existence of which there is no evidence whatever.
Before this court will reverse a judgment, it must
It is so ordered.